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by cr1895 3192 days ago
I know people stick their DOB (and photo!) on their CVs in the Netherlands. As far as I'm aware that would be quite odd to see in the US. There are some differences here in what is comfortably or preemptively shared with employers between the US and the NL.
3 comments

It's still the usual way of things in Germany. You bet I had a nice professional photo taken. You list not only your birth date, but birthplace and marital/family status.

Job-hunting as a married-but-childless 30 year old woman here is awesome. Not. When I was stupid enough to make the whole "why do we list our family status on our resumes" thing a point of smalltalk towards the end of one of my first interviews here, the guy cheerfully told me, "oh, because we need to pay a family father of 3 more than we need to pay a single guy"

... and the young, childless wife of an engineer working at that small city's most generously-paying employer? The guy did not seem to believe I needed a job at all. All's well that ends well, and I'm now in a far better job that has a relatively transparent union payscale, but it stung at the time.

My husband, a German, has told me that you used to also list the occupations of your parents!

Good grief, that's incredibly off-putting. I've refused to add a photo and DOB to my CV on principle and fortunately it hasn't seemed to hinder my job seeking.
You should see the stuff the gradeschool of my kids asks me about without so much as blushing.
It would be after the hiring decision, but the I-9 requests plenty of information.

https://www.uscis.gov/i-9

That's pretty much de facto standard in Sweden too! Seems to be very common in Europe in general.